REPORT OF THE STATE ENTOMOLOGIST IC07 209 
He RIrapiiiGdOlalDicg CEmBUloeS Oa So Wide species ap- 
peared in surprising abundance in my tent trap set in Beaver 
Meadow brook at Old Forge. Ina spring brook at “ The Glen” 
Ithaca, I have found it likewise abundant. The larva is described 
at the conclusion of this list. 
7” Ula elewams OQ; SQ “ Wae Giea~ lines, “Mle 25, 
1g07; at trap lanterns, rarely, in August at Old Forge. 
7 Mimalopils calear O, Ss Ave wrap llamhiemng, s\uerklsi 
1905, Old Forge. 
[eS OPIS MiuConls came On So.) Vanlins, INV, Sep- 
‘tember 10, 1872. Old Forge, during July and August. Not ae 
quently resting spiderlike on the outside of the hatchery build- 
ing at Old Forge, and easily picked by hand. 
79 Pedicia albivitta Walk. Specimens labeled Bald- 
winsville, N. Y., September, and Manlius, N. Y., September 1o, 
1872 are in the Cornell University collection. The figures of 
the immature stages of this species described by me in bulletin 
68 of the N. Y. State Museum are republished herewith [fig. 18 
Oh, Op Els 
SO ILiOGmie MOGLEORMIS O,..S, Ar GlavellS josie Oe Waris 
species was taken while sweeping by the spring at the “ Old fish 
ponds” at Old Forge. ‘They were clinging to the grasses at 
the edge of the spring brook. . 
Su Pialacrocera tipulina © S Of ams tnscesuine 
species I have seen only a single wing [pl. 3, fig. 6: it is ample 
for identification]. I found it in the leaf of a pitcher plant 
(Sarracenia) ina little upland sphagnum bog between Little 
Moose mountain and the Old Forge pond while accompanying 
Dr Felt on a collecting trip for bog mosquitos August 3, 1905. 
The “pitcher ’ contained besides this wing: 
8 wings of an undetermined species of Dicranomyia 
4 wings of an undetermined species of Rhamphomyia 
4 wings of some member of Anthomyiidae 
4 wings of some member of the Muscidae 
I wing of a Ceratopogon 
I wing of a Leptomorphus 
4 wings of undetermined species of Sciophila 
2 wings of undetermined species of Psilocephala 
4 wings of an undetermined caddis fly, probably Limnophila 
The remains of a big longicorn beetle, and 
4 living and normal orthoraphous fly larvae, healthy and well fed citizens 
of the place. The miscellaneous Diptera of the above list were kindly deter- 
mined for me by Dr O. A. Johannsen. 
